Herbalife Defenders Get Personal With Ackman, Shorts

Written by: Antoine Gara12/21/12 - 3:54 PM EST

Tickers in this article:
HLF

NEW YORK ( TheStreet) - In defending 'Buy' ratings for
Herbalife(HLF) , Wall Street analysts are getting personal with William Ackman, the head of Pershing Square Capital Management , who's just unveiled a 334-page presentation on why he feels the supplements maker is a pyramid scheme worth $0.

Notably, in the wake of Ackman's presentation that Herbalife is a multi-decade pyramid scheme, analysts at Cannacord Genuity and B. Riley & Co. are comparing the sometimes activist investor to Barry Minkow , a convicted fraudster who was previously the company's most vocal short in 2007 and 2008.

Meanwhile Timothy Ramey, an analyst at D.A. Davidson & Co., argues Ackman doesn't understand the popularity of Herbalife's weight loss products because he hails from Chappaqua, N.Y., an upscale New York suburb that may be sheltered from the health concerns of the ordinary public.

Currently, Minkow, who also was a vocal critic of multi-level marketing company Nu Skin (NUS) , is serving a 5-year prison sentence for conspiring to manipulate the stock of homebuilder Lennar(LEN)

Ackman has caused an over 35% stock drop in Herbalife after disclosing to CNBC on Dec. 19 that he is short the company's shares and feels its multi-level marketing arrangement is more of a fraudulent pyramid scheme than a multi-billion dollar retail business.

Herbalife chief executive Michael O. Johnson took to the network's airwaves shortly thereafter to mount a vigorous defense against Ackman's allegations and called the short position "market manipulation," but he was unable to stem share losses that continued on Thursday as Pershing Square detailed the investment at the Ira Sohn Conference . "Herbalife is not an illegal pyramid scheme," the company said in a Thursday statement.

The company also said on Friday it will conduct an analyst day on the week of Jan. 7 to respond in detail to "the distorted, outdated and inaccurate information contained in Pershing Square's presentation." While Herbalife appears to be mounting a defense to Ackman's short, its shares continue to drop, falling over 19% in Friday trading.

What's interesting is how little weight analyst 'Buy' ratings and multiple defenses of Herbalife share recommendations have had on markets in the wake of Ackman's presentation. Meanwhile, personal attacks against Ackman stand out, given the hedge funder's otherwise strong market reputation. Ackman's recently won proxy a battle against Canadian Pacific (CP) , participated in the IPO of Burger King (BKW) and led a still-uncertain overhaul of J.C. Penney (JCP) .

"The public allegations are the challenge to investor sentiment rather than a realization of an argument that the business model isn't sustainable," writes Cannacord Genuity analyst Scott Van Winkle, in a Dec. 21 note to clients addressing Ackman's presentation.

"The last aggressive short-seller, Barry Minkow, argued five years ago, with just as great a level of detail and equal vigor, that this business model was unsustainable. Five years later, Minkow is in prison for securities fraud and Herbalife sales are nearly double the prior level," adds the analyst, who maintains a 'Buy' rating and $76 a share price target.

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